Basketball Soul System: I Got Westbrook's MVP Powers in Another World! -
Chapter 73 :Ghost Hands — The MVP Was Never a Myth
Chapter 73: Chapter 73 :Ghost Hands — The MVP Was Never a Myth
The starting lineup for the Iron City Roarers hit the court: Ryan, Lin, Malik, Kamara, and Gibson.
Ryan quickly checked his system overlay:
[WESTBROOK SYNC RATE: 84.2%]
Despite two grueling hours of daily gym workouts, progress felt like a slog, the numbers creeping forward at a snail’s pace. He shook it off, focusing on the task ahead.
The clock ticked to 9:30 PM, and the jump ball soared into the air.
Malik leaped with authority, tipping the ball to Ryan with a crisp flick.
Ryan gathered it, dribbling with purpose, his eyes locking onto Amin Thomas, the Starships’ guard.
The easy grin from their pregame hug was gone, replaced by a steely focus—Amin’s reputation for ferocious defense was no joke, and Ryan had no intention of slugging it out all night.
Lin curled off the wing, and Ryan handed the ball off smoothly, the exchange effortless between them.
One quick crossover from Lin sent the defending Hardell stumbling, and Lin slipped past him with ease.
Hardell’s offense and playmaking were elite, but his defense, often mocked as "eyeball guarding," was a known weak spot.
He barely reacted to getting beat, trusting his center to clean up the mess.
Lin didn’t force it. As the big man stepped up to contest, Lin dished a sharp bounce pass to Ryan cutting along the baseline. The lane was wide open, the center’s overcommitment leaving a gaping hole. Amin scrambled back in pursuit, but Ryan wasn’t waiting—he exploded upward, unleashing a one-handed slam dunk, the rim rattling as the crowd erupted. No layup when a dunk would do.
Roarers took an early 2-0 lead.
The crowd roared to life.
The Starships inbounded, and Hardell crossed half-court, the Roarers holding off an early double-team for now. Ryan stepped up to guard him one-on-one. Hardell flicked a glance Ryan’s way, then, without warning, burst into a sprint, his dribble a blur.
Ryan chased, closing in just inside the three-point line.
Hardell subtly bumped him with the shoulder, then stopped on a dime and stepped back beyond the arc. Ryan’s momentum betrayed him—he stumbled and landed hard on his backside.
Hardell looked down at him, shrugged, gave his shoulder a little shake, then pulled the three.
Swish.
Starships 3–2. Lead change.
Ryan clenched his jaw, a fire lighting in his chest.
Play me like that, huh? We’ll see about that. On the next Roarers possession, he signaled Lin for a pick-and-roll.
Lin set a solid screen on Amin, and Ryan seized the moment, cutting left with a sharp crossover.
Amin was still tangled behind Lin, forcing Hardell to switch onto Ryan. With a feint right, Ryan planted and crossed left in a fluid Euro step—one stride, two—gliding past Hardell and the center with ease before laying it in softly.
4-3, Roarers back on top, the crowd’s roar fueling the momentum.
Then, Hardell floated in a smooth teardrop over the outstretched arms of Gibson—nothing but net. 4–5, Starships reclaimed the lead.
On the next possession, Ryan called for another screen from Lin, targeting Hardell for the switch.
With a quick crossover, he shook free, gliding past the initial defense with ease. But just as he took his first step, Hardell’s hand snaked out from behind, a phantom strike that caught Ryan off guard.
His grip faltered, the ball slipping loose, and Amin Thomas pounced, turning the turnover into a lightning-fast breakaway layup. The score jumped to 4-7.
Ryan trudged back to inbound the ball, his mind reeling, the sting of the mistake burning hot.
"Don’t sleep on him," Kamara said. "He’s lazy on D most nights, sure. But when he wants to lock in? He’s got those sticky hands. They call him ’Ghost Hands’ for a reason."
Ryan nodded, the weight of the lesson sinking deep into his bones, a quiet hum of realization settling over him. He’d been careless, letting hubris blind him to the truth—an All-Star, a former MVP, carried a reputation forged in sweat and fire, one that demanded respect.
The sting of his misjudgment lingered, a sharp edge against the adrenaline pumping through his veins.
He exhaled slowly, resetting his mind, the arena’s roar fading to a distant pulse as he locked into the moment.
Ryan tightened his focus, every move now deliberate, each step a calculated risk etched into the hardwood beneath his sneakers. His eyes narrowed, scanning the court with the precision of a hawk, every glance a strategic probe into the Starships’ formation.
The scoreboard ticked up on both ends, a relentless metronome of points—6-7, then 10-10—neither team willing to yield, both locked in a fierce back-and-forth that turned the Iron Vault Arena into a cauldron of raw energy.
The crowd’s cheers swelled and dipped with each possession, a living tide that fueled the intensity.
But as the minutes crawled by, a subtle shift began to emerge, like a storm cloud gathering on the horizon. Hardell’s rhythm cooled, his once-fluid motion stiffening under the pressure. A pull-up three clanged off the rim with a harsh metallic echo, the ball rebounding wildly into the stands. The next jumper hit the front iron, a dull thud that drew a collective wince from the fans.
He stopped hunting his own shot, his shoulders slumping slightly as he pivoted to facilitate, his gaze shifting to his teammates with a strategist’s intent.
The Roarers didn’t let up, though—Ryan and the defense stayed glued to him, their eyes sharp, their feet quick.
Yet Hardell’s shift in approach proved just as dangerous. Time and again, he sliced through the Roarers’ defense with pinpoint drives, threading the needle to find open shooters in the corners or dishing easy feeds to the big man under the basket. His vision was a weapon, turning breakdowns into opportunities with surgical precision.
Then, with just under four minutes left in the quarter, Hardell tried to shake Ryan again—step-back three, signature move.
Not this time.
Ryan was ready. He exploded forward, arm extended—and smack—blocked it clean. The ball shot toward midcourt.
Ryan was already in motion. He chased it down in stride, gathered, and took flight. One dribble, one bounce, one hammer of a dunk.
Bang!
The arena erupted.
Roarers 23, Starships 22.
Starships coach called timeout, jaw clenched, clipboard already in hand.
The Starships yanked Jalen Hardell from the game, sending him to the bench for a breather, his jersey damp with sweat as he slumped into his seat.
Coach Crawford countered the move, pulling Malik and Gibson— the oldest vets on the Roarers’ roster— and subbing in Stanley and Sloan, their fresh legs ready to inject some energy.
The game rolled on.
Amin Thomas remained on the floor, his tenacious defense clamping down on Ryan like a vice, limiting his chances to get clean looks.
The first quarter clock wound down, and when the buzzer sounded, the Roarers clung to a slim 32-30 lead, the scoreboard glowing under the arena lights.
As the second quarter tipped off, Ryan found himself waved to the bench for a rest, his lungs burning from the early grind.
From the sidelines, he glanced over at the Starships’ bench. Hardell was still parked there, his head tilted back, exhaustion etched into every line of his face.
Kamara, freshly subbed out beside him, nudged Ryan with a grin. "Looks like he’s running on fumes."
Ryan cracked a wide smile, the corner of his mouth twitching with mischief. "Probably partied too hard at the nightclub last night. Works in our favor."
Without Hardell’s ball-handling wizardry and with Amin now resting, the Starships’ offense stumbled, their rhythm thrown off. The Roarers seized the moment, riding Sloan’s relentless hustle. He snatched rebounds left and right, including two critical offensive boards, converting second-chance opportunities into points.
The lead stretched to 42-34, the gap widening with every possession.
Sensing a double-digit deficit looming, the Starships coach didn’t hesitate.
Timeout.
The timeout ended with both coaches resetting the board. When play resumed, it was back to the heavyweights—both starting fives returned to the court, the tension humming like live wire.
Starships had the ball.
Jalen Hardell jogged it up past half-court, eyes narrowed. Ryan crouched low, waiting, feet active, his breath steady but sharp.
Hardell jab-stepped, then launched into a drive, trying to turn the corner. But something was off. His first step wasn’t as explosive, his shoulders rolled instead of snapping through—half a beat slow.
Ryan read it instantly. As Hardell crossed over, he struck.
Flick.
The ball popped free, and before anyone could react, Ryan was already accelerating. He scooped it up mid-stride, eyes locked on the rim.
Fast break.
A few dribbles. Lift-off.
The dunk was thunderous—backboard shaking, rim bending, crowd erupting.
The energy surged through the arena like a lightning bolt.
Roarers up 44–34.
Jogging back on defense, Ryan passed Hardell, who was trudging to inbound the ball.
A smirk tugged at Ryan’s lips as he couldn’t resist a jab. "You good, bro? Looks like last night’s nightclub binge hit you hard."
Hardell’s eyes narrowed, a flicker of irritation breaking through his fatigue. "Kid, I’m about to get serious," he shot back, his voice low and edged with promise.
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